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Survival of patients diagnosed with subsets of lymphoid neoplasms and acute myeloid leukemia from 2000 to 2010 in the Vale do Paraíba, State of São Paulo: are we going the right way?

LETTERS TO EDITOR

Survival of patients diagnosed with subsets of lymphoid neoplasms and acute myeloid leukemia from 2000 to 2010 in the Vale do Paraíba, State of São Paulo: are we going the right way?

Fernando Callera; Alvaro Azevedo Vital Brasil; Anna Raquel de Lima Casali; Carla Cecília Mulin; Evandro Secchi Rosa; Maíra de Assis Barbosa; Thais Domitila Freire Vieira

Grupo de Onco-Hematologia do Vale do Paraíba - GOHV, São José dos Campos, SP, Brazil

Corresponding author Corresponding author: Fernando Callera Grupo de Onco-Hematologia do Vale do Paraíba - GOHV Rua Euclides Miragaia 700, Sala 75 - Centro 12245-820 - São José dos Campos SP, Brazil Phone: 55 12 3207-9846 fcallera@gmail.com

We recently reported on the demographic characteristics, prevalence and incidence of oncohematological diseases in the Vale do Paraíba, State of São Paulo.(1) However, there are insufficient data to provide specific information on survival rates of patients with oncohematological diseases in this region. Against this background, the Grupo de Onco-Hematologia do Vale do Paraíba (GOHV) set out to assess the survival of patients with subtypes of lymphoid neoplasms and acute non-promyelocytic leukemia (AML).

The GOHV consists of medical oncohematological representatives of the following services: Hospital Frei Galvão of Guaratinguetá, Hospital Regional de Vale do Paraíba located in the city of Taubaté, Oncovida, Centro de Oncohematologia of Taubaté, Hospital PIO XII in São José dos Campos and the Serviço de Hematologia de São José dos Campos. The services of Hospital Frei Galvão, Hospital Regional de Vale do Paraíba and Hospital PIO XII in São José dos Campos are referral centers in the Regional Health Division XVII, composed of 39 municipalities in the Vale do Paraíba. Together, the services that comprise the GOHV attend all adult Brazilian National Health Service patients in the region as well as more than 90 percent of adult patients of other healthcare insurers.

A retrospective study was carried out from January 2000 to December 2010 and a total of 682 over 19-year-old patients were enrolled. The diagnoses of lymphomas, multiple myeloma (MM) and AML were based on the criteria of the World Health Organization and the French-American-British classifications.(2,3)

The subtypes of lymphoid neoplasms analyzed were diffuse large B cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma (DLBCL - n = 212; median age 59 years; range: 20-86), follicular lymphoma (FL - n = 112; median age 63 years; range: 47-85), Hodgkin's lymphoma (HL - n = 132; median age 32 years; range: 19-74) and multiple myeloma (MM - n = 129; median age 65 years; range: 38-94). Among the patients with AML (n = 97) the median age was 67 years (range: 19-84). Overall survival (OS) was defined as the time interval from the date of diagnosis to death from any cause or to the last follow-up in censored patients. Survival analysis was carried out according to the Kaplan-Meier method.

The median time of follow-up was 58 months. The median survival rates were undefined for DLBCL, FL and HL, 38 months for MM and four months for AML. The OS curves according to diagnosis are shown in Figure 1. The estimated 5-year OS obtained from the survival curves of the patients diagnosed with lymphoid neoplasms and AML were compared with the results of the European Cancer Registry based project on hematologic malignancies (HAEMACARE)(4) and the specialized registry of hematologic malignancies of Côte d'Or, France,(5) respectively. The HAEMACARE project enrolled 184, 166 patients diagnosed with lymphoid neoplasms between 1995 and 2002 in 48 European cancer registries and the French study reported twenty-five years (1980-2004) of data on 5086 patients with myeloid malignancies, including AML (Table 1).


This study does not allow a critical comparative analysis because of the limited number of patients studied. Besides, it should be reinforced that comparisons of survival of patients require that individual neoplastic entities be grouped into clinical categories with similar prognoses. However, in general our data compare favorably to these reports. The possible reasons for this are based on the improvements in the quality of care which have been introduced in the Vale do Paraíba over the last decade, new treatment options such as rituximab, thalidomide and proteasome inhibitors and more intensive chemotherapy followed by autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (which has been used in this region since 2004) as well as the practice guidelines for the use of antimicrobial agents in neutropenic patients with cancer, hospital environmental precautions and allogeneic bone marrow transplant from related or unrelated donors probably should have led to a better survival rates for our patients.

Finally, despite the limitations of our study, we suggest that the survival of patients with lymphoid and myeloid neoplasm subtypes achieved at services that comprise the GOHV represent what is expected according to the literature.

Submitted: 12/5/2011

Accepted: 12/21/2011

Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The authors declare no competing financial interest

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  • 1. Callera F, Vital Brasil AA, Casali AR, Mulin CC, Rosa ES, Barbosa MA, et al. Oncohematological diseases in the Vale do Paraíba, State of São Paulo: demographic aspects, prevalences and incidences. Rev Bras Hematol Hemoter. 2011;33(2):120-5.
  • 2. Head DR, Cerezo L, Savage RA, Craven CM, Bickers JN, Hartsock R, et al. Institutional performance in application of the FAB classification of acute leukemia. The Southwest Oncology Group experience. Cancer. 1985;55(9);1979-86.
  • 3. Harris NL, Jaffe ES, Diebold J, Flandrin G, Muller-Hermelink HK, Vardiman J. Lymphoma classification: from controversy to consensus. The R.E.A.L. and WHO classification of lymphoid neoplasms. Ann Oncol. 2000;11 Suppl 1:3-10.
  • 4. Marcos-Gragera R, Allemani C, Tereanu C, De Angelis R, Capocaccia R, Maynadie M, Luminari S, Ferretti S, Johannesen TB, Sankila R, Karjalainen-Lindsberg ML, Simonetti A, Martos MC, Raphaël M, Giraldo P, Sant M; HAEMACARE Working Group. Survival of European patients diagnosed with lymphoid neoplasms in 2000-2002: results of the HAEMACARE project. Haematologica. 2011;96(5):720-8.
  • 5. Maynadié M, Girodon F, Manivet-Janoray I, Mounier M, Mugneret F, Bailly F, et al. Twenty-five years of epidemiological recording on myeloid malignancies: data from the specialized registry of hematologic malignancies of Côte D'or (Burgundy, France). Haematologica. 2011;96(1):55-61.
  • Corresponding author:

    Fernando Callera
    Grupo de Onco-Hematologia do Vale do Paraíba - GOHV
    Rua Euclides Miragaia 700, Sala 75 - Centro
    12245-820 - São José dos Campos SP, Brazil
    Phone: 55 12 3207-9846
  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      11 May 2012
    • Date of issue
      2012
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